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Returning Home to Dinner Prepared by My Wife: A Conversation I Knew Wouldn’t Be Easy

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I shuffled home for dinner, the meal my wife, Mollie Penrose, had been whipping up that evening. I needed to have a chat with her a tough one so I kicked off with, Ive got something to tell you She didnt answer, just turned back to the stove. In her eyes I saw that familiar sting of disappointment.

I had to keep the conversation going, so I blurted out that we should get a divorce. She only asked, Why? I couldnt meet the question, so I sidestepped.

That set her off. She threw a tantrum, flinging whatever she could grab at me. Youre no man! she shouted. There was nothing more to say. I went to bed, lay there for ages, and could hear her sobbing. I struggled to explain what was happening to our marriage; I didnt know how to tell her Id fallen out of love, that only pity remained, and that Id given my heart to Jane.

The next morning I drafted all the paperwork divorce and division of assets. I was keeping the house, the car, and 30% of the shares in my catering firm. Mollie smirked, tore the papers up and said she wanted nothing from me, then broke down in tears again. Ten years together tugged at my heart, but her reaction only hardened my resolve.

That night I came home late, skipped dinner and crashed straight into the bedroom. Mollie was at the kitchen table, scribbling something. I woke up in the dead of night to find her still writing, perched over the desk. I felt no attachment any more; the closeness we once had was gone.

In the morning she told me she had a few conditions for the split. She wanted us to stay on civil terms, as far as we could manage, because our son, Charlie, had his school exams in a month and she feared the news would unsettle him. That was reasonable enough. Her second demand was absurd: for a whole month she wanted me to carry her out of the bedroom each morning, in my arms, all the way to the front door, as a reminder of the day I first brought her home after the wedding.

I didnt argue I was indifferent. At work I mentioned the request to Jane, who snorted and called it a pitiful attempt by my wife to manipulate me back into the family.

On the first day of the carrying I felt utterly awkward. We looked like strangers. Charlie spotted us and shouted, Dads carrying Mum! while Mollie whispered, Dont say anything to him I set her down by the front door and she shuffled off to the bus stop.

The second day flowed more naturally. I even noticed, for the first time, the fine lines around her eyes and a few silver strands in her hair. Shed poured so much warmth into our marriage; what could I possibly give back?

A tiny spark began to flicker between us, growing a little each day. Oddly, the more I lifted her, the lighter she seemed to become. I kept quiet about it with Jane.

On the final day, I went to fetch her from the hallway and found her by the wardrobe, lamenting how much weight shed lost lately she truly had slimmed down dramatically. Was she worrying about our relationship? Charlie burst in and asked, Whens Papa going to carry Mum again? Hed taken it as a sort of family tradition. I hoisted her up, feeling exactly like on our wedding day. She tucked her arms around my neck with a faint smile. The only thing that nagged at me was her weight.

I set her down, grabbed the car keys and rushed to the office. Meeting Jane, I blurted, I dont want a divorce weve just grown cold because we stopped paying attention to each other. Jane slapped me and fled, tears streaming.

All I really wanted was to see Mollie. I bolted out, popped into the nearest florist, and bought the biggest bouquet they had. When the clerk asked what to write on the card, I replied, It would make me happy to carry you forever, until the end of my days.

I got home, heart light, grin on my face, and raced up the stairs to the bedroom. Mollie lay on the bed she was dead.

Later I learned she had been fighting cancer bravely for months. She never told me anything, and I never saw it, too wrapped up in my own drama with Jane. Mollie was a remarkably wise woman: shed concocted those divorce conditions so that I wouldnt turn into a monster in Charlies eyes.

I hope my story might help someone keep their family together. Many give up without realising theyre only one step away from a breakthrough.

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